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Russia sends its first humanoid robot Fedor into space

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MOSCOW: Russia on Thursday launched an unmanned rocket carrying a life-size humanoid robot that will spend 10 days learning to assist astronauts on the International Space Station.


Named Fedor, short for Final Experimental Demonstration Object Research, the robot is the first ever sent up by Russia.


Fedor blasted off in a Soyuz MS-14 spacecraft from Russia’s Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The Soyuz is set to dock with the space station on Saturday and stay till September 7.


Soyuz ships are normally manned on such trips, but on Thursday no humans are travelling in order to test a new emergency rescue system.


Instead of cosmonauts, Fedor, also known as Skybot F850, was strapped into a specially adapted pilot’s seat, with a small Russian flag in hand.


“Let’s go. Let’s go,” the robot was heard saying during launch, repeating the famous phrase used by first man in space Yuri Gagarin.


The silvery anthropomorphic robot stands 1.80 metres tall and weighs 160 kilogrammes.


Fedor has Instagram and Twitter accounts with posts saying it is learning new skills such as opening a bottle of water. In the station, it will trial those manual skills in very low gravity.


“That’s connecting and disconnecting electric cables (and) using standard items, from a screwdriver and a spanner to a fire extinguisher,” the Russian space agency’s director for prospective programmes and science, Alexander Bloshenko, said in televised comments ahead of the launch.


“The first stage of in-flight experiments went according to the flight plan,” the robot tweeted after reaching orbit. — AFP


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